Rami Malek wins best actor Oscar for 'Bohemian Rhapsody'

LOS ANGELES -- Rami Malek had difficult moments making "Bohemian Rhapsody," but he has an Oscar to show for it.

Malek, receiving the best actor trophy Sunday for his portrayal of Queen frontman Freddie Mercury, called it a "monumental moment." He thanked members of the band in attendance.

"I may not have been the obvious choice, but I guess it worked out," Malek said. "Thank you, Queen, thank you, guys, for allowing me to be the tiniest part of your phenomenal, extraordinary legacy. I am forever in your debt."

Malek speculated about what he would have made of the honor as a child.

"I think his curly-haired mind would have been blown," he said. "That kid was struggling with his identity, trying to figure himself out."

He lauded "Bohemian Rhapsody" for telling the story of a gay man and an immigrant who lived his life as "unapologetically himself." Mercury, who was born in Zanzibar to parents from India, moved to England with his family as a teenager.

Malek noted that he himself is the son of immigrants, from Egypt, and a first-generation American. He gave a shout-out to his mother - "I love you, lady" - and regretted that his father was not alive.

"My dad didn't get to see me do any of this, but I think he's looking down on me right now," he said.

Rami Malek stumbles while attending the 91st Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on February 24, 2019, in Hollywood, California.

Malek had a brief fall from the heights of his best-actor Oscar victory, but he recovered in time to deliver emotional remarks on how much it meant to him to win his award.

The actor was checked by medical personnel after he took a tumble inside the auditorium shortly after winning. He appeared fine when he came backstage to answer reporters' questions.

"The fact that I have this in my hand right now is beyond my expectation that myself or perhaps my family ever could have had," he said, clutching his Oscar backstage.

Malek, who was best known for his award-winning role as a disturbed hacker in TV's "Mr. Robot," was the front-runner coming into the Oscars, having collected an armful of awards including Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild trophies.

He has spoken, briefly but publicly, about the difficulty of working with director Bryan Singer before Singer was fired from "Bohemian Rhapsody." It was "not pleasant, not pleasant at all," he said earlier this month at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.

Singer's firing came amidst sexual abuse allegations against the director, which he has categorically denied and weren't cited as the reason for his being dropped from the film.

The other nominees in the category were Christian Bale for "Vice"; Bradley Cooper in "A Star Is Born"; Willem Dafoe with "At Eternity's Gate" and Viggo Mortensen in "Green Book.